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" POPULATION 29,919 TEN ANERCANS AV INNO MAYS LAND 5K Only One Man Out of the Party of Ten Succeeded in Regaining the American Trenches THE OTHER FOUR ARE REPORTED AS MISSING The Military Activity in the Various Theaters of War Daily Continuies to Incresse — Violent Duels Be! tween the Germans and the French Are in Progress Separate Peace With the Ukraine Rada—The Central Powers Are Endeavoring to Obtain a Cessation of Hos- tilities With Rumania. military ‘activity in the various u:“&u of the war daily comtinues to increase. From the North sea all along in Belgium and France and northern Italian front from the of Lake Garda eastward e river there have been clash- infanteymen at intg bombardments e proportions on nu- troops holding the Man's Land, were ambuscaded by a superior force of the enemy, but fought valiantly against great odds until they either were killed or made prisoner. Only one man out of the little party of ten sucgeeded in regaining the American trenches, and he was wound- Five of the Americans are be- to have been killed. The other four are missing. .. Immediately the patrdl was attacked the guns of the Americans in the :!;nd‘lel Jaid down a barrage against have shown recently it “is along the American front that some of the members of the enemy party were | wil killed or wounded. The artillery again bas be- bombardment _of i e neighbornood of the Houtholst forest, morth of Ypres, and southwes: of while ¥iolent duei- :.ce In progress tween the Germans and the French German gun an intensive British ity against the Germ: toward (on both sides of the Moselle ri belleved | bsen settled, the around Nieuport, in the Champagne, on the Verdun sector and in the Vosges German mountains. The official com- munication edys there has been creased vit which would indicate that on the west- ern side of the stream the Americans are engaging them. Except. for several attempted raid: by the to the west of Monte Grappa are re- ported by the Rome war office as live I both Austria and Germany over th success of the central powers in effect. ing a separate peace with the Ukrain rada. While the exact terms of the peace have not yet been announced, it i expected that the central powers | oo Ukrainians will lend their aid to the in suppressing the Bolshevik and that in return Germany and Austria wijl receive much of the wheat and othe: food supplies in the Ukraine, on which it has been known for a long time they had set their-hearts. Peace with the Ukrainians are bent uj signed. ICE JAMMED N BEND OF MONONGHELA RIVER Breaking Up Movembih Has Stopped | Momentarily. Pittsburgh, Pa, Feb. 10.—Move- ment of the great ice gorge in the Mononghela river, extending for near- Jy_tén miles above Brownsville, Pa. which started to break up early today and which threatened to sause con- siderable damage alonz the lower ly, a ceived here 'tonight. of ice, described as being thirty feet high, was reported to have jammed at ® bend in the river at Number Five Pool, which is a short distance below Brownsville, lower river has been cleared of ~ many of which have sought sheiter in the Alleghany river which rose but slightly during the day. e o Ao Jham PREDICT THIS THE LAST HEATLESS MONDAY. Garfield is -Greatly Encouraged Over the Prospects. Washington. b. 10—The east will fuel adminis. 4 t last heatless 3 Already the clesing order has been suspended insofar as it applies to eight southern states, and the good weather of the last few dags with its consequent improvement in rallrond traffic conditions will make enforcement unnecessary anywhere af- ter this week. Fuel Administrator Garfield is great- ly encouraged over the prospects and is confident a situation will not arise again similar to that which. brought the order suspending activity for five days in succession and the Monda closings. i THOMAS AiEDl!oN WILL BE 71 TODAY. Too Busy to Think of Celebrating the Event. New York, Feb. 10.—Thomas A. Edi- son will be 71 years old tomorrow. There will be no celebration of the event at Menlo Park, N. J, the Edison home. it was said, because the great inventor was too busy on his work for the United States government to &pend the day in idleness. His natal day will not be forgotten, . The members of the “As- sociation of Edistn Ploneers,” m-de up of associates of Mr. Edison in clec- tric light work in 1885, or # earlter, which was formed in this city on Jan, 24, will gather here from all part. of the country to have hincheon together in his honor, aithough he will mct be present. MORE MATERIALS WHICH MAY NOT BE EXPORTED Added to List by the War Trade Board — All Require License. Washington, Feb, 10. — Additions made today by the war trade board :llllll‘of':llhflxh'hlfimynm Ibe GERMAN PAPERS COMMENT ON SINKING OF TUSCANIA |rati Surprised That the Carried Only 2400 Men. the Berlin- Deutsche Tlx:‘ Zeitung affect sur- transport car- ried npmnmueg 2,400 men. "Thus, |Ome sixteen France, that only about 40,000 there. This, prise that the as“according Teports,” transports ‘have arrived - in they calculate American troops are now they assert, agrees with independent information at hana Germania “threatened to ance” Secretary of War Baker. “Even 80, it concludes, “we do not of me:‘-mimm the erica’s nevertheless. 100k Tor successes.” importance but sha furth er The Koelnische Volks Zeitupg says the event must unfailingly dampen the spirits of "Americans and proceeds: “Sundry American _vesscs, som with munitions and perhaps o -2 number of soldiers, have beer before, but loéjr fi we know this is first case of & big transport with a. considerable number of troobs aboard falling victim to our U-beats. May large sized transports have never or rarely so far crossed, for the Ameri- can forces in France are not yet very gratifying.” The Berlin ULTIMATUM SENT TO THE RUMANIAN GOVERNMEN Mackensen Demands That Peace Ne- vacant gotiations Be Begun Within' Four Days. Basel, Switzerland, Feb. 10.—Ger- say that Field Marshal Von MacKensen sent an ultimatum to the Rumanian ruary 6 demanding tiations be begun The Rumanian igned. man newspapers arriving here government on Feb that peace negof within four days. cabinet thereupon resi; LEHIGH VALLEY FREIGHT ’ TRANSFER STATION BURNED At Oak Island, on the Newark Mead- ows—Loss About $200,000. Newark, N. J, Feh 10.—Fire de- Lehigh Valley. fyeignt transfer station at Oak Island, on the troyed the Newark Meadows, early today. A two story frame office buflding and covered platform were burned, - gether with five freight cars. loaqed ARMS FOR CHINA Vi merchandise and thirteen emp- |Under the Japanese Arms Loan Has Officials of the raflroad said tonight the station ‘The loss is esti- that the work of rebuilding already had in- ans ver, and Austrians on the northern Italian front, the big guns on both sides are doing all of the work. The duels on the Asiago plateau and y. Much pleasure is being evinced in tral powers no: German on of npstilities | draw his bayonst against thess The time limit of the beat the Httle Big - Transport |havior of the Germans to the. Italians Amsterd: Feb. 10—in their com- atE o e Ahban ot T o et $ooM fenl wets WRRTEE . Hesaetl e unbal- | “As such vessels must be convoved with great cafe our U-boat’s achieve- ment is all the more remarkable and Mittag Am Zeitun; makes a gimilar comment and 'rejorleai that so much war material was lost, and that the rescued soldiers will not immediately avatlable for service. Cabled Paragraphs - Diamandy. Has Reached Stockholm. Stockholm, Feb. 10. — Coustantine Diamandy,. the Rumanian minister o Russia, who' was dismissed by the Bolsheviki, reached _Stockholm . on oh Saturday night. ‘He accom- panied by his staft and members o the Rumanian colony, in Petrograd. GERMANS TREAT ITALIAN PRISONERS BRUTALLY' Fact Verified by British Soldiers Who Have Returned From Germany. London, Feb. 10—Reuter's Limited has received copies of carefully -veri- fled sworn statgments British soldiers who have rem;nnha %G“_ man prison camps and hospitals Te- garding systematic brutality prac- ticed by the Germans upon - Italian prisoners, = These - reports .come from over a.dozen different: parts of Ger- many., They have been. confirmed by independent _testimony. all are of recent origin, as' the sol- Who gave the ‘testimony left Germany only recently, a majority of them having been released from pris- on camps about a month ago. Placed in Separate Camp. Regarding the camp at Langensal za, Saxony, evidence has been recelved from more than a dozen independent sourcs. In November about 2,000 Ital- ian prisoners were brought' in and placed in a separate part of the camp behind harbed wire. | According _to the reports they were un=ccessari knocked about by under officers and guards who struck them with rifie butts and scabbards. Italians Seemed Famished. The Italians seemed famished and used to' rush for their soup. The Germans, however, stabbed them with swords 'and - bayonets, . Kkilllng or wounding many of them. Seven or eight Itallans were dyinz from star- vation in the camp every day. Onme Italian testified that he had been fif- teen days on the journey to the camp and had had only three meals during all that time. v There is a strong feeling among the Bnglish * prisoners that something should be done for the Italians who are dving at the rate of six or séven a {day through starvation or dysentery. Only Food Was Bread. From the Dulmen, Westphalia, camp there are reports from many inde- pendent witnesses concerning the way the Italian prisoners are treafed. It is stated that the prisoners were march- ed al] the way from Italv with no other 'food ' than bread. They were also knocked about and starved and erwise treated with inhumanity. English prisoners -gave ‘them their German rations, Beaten With Bayonet. * One witness said that three or four ‘weeks before he left Dulmen two or three hundred Italian prisoners ar- rived there. ' All of them virtally were starved. “T saw a se e T men and them,” said this wit- ness, In Cassel- it ‘is same brutality is regularly prac- ticed. One witness said the Italians traveled twelve days on three issues The Germans, this re- port said, were giving them only halt ons, At Mimster it was testified. the be- had become much worse. since the re- cent large capture of Italians. The prisoners very much from the in blankets, whenever they could. This bad conduct and bullyinz on the part of the Germans set in onlv rocently. Wwitness gaid he saw the Italians knocked down frequently and also hit with the butt end of rifies. This treatment was not due particularly to bad conduct on the part of the pris: omers, but simply because they were Itallans. = These men have one ration of soup and bread. daflv. Fought For Pread. Stmilar evidence comes from Zerbst, Anbalt, where Italian prisoners after five days’ journey without food were driven back by the Germans with il jget their soup llowance, Another boat | witness testified that at the Hemeln camp the Ttalians were nearly starved and fought among themselves for a piece of bread thrown to them by British _prisoners: At Friedrichsfelde, province of Brandenburg, the treatment .of the tallans was equally barbarous, Here entries shot Italians for trying to fet food from the British prisoners. ! "11v revolting stories come from iE melburch, Stendal, Soltau, Lim- burg and Hamburg. MEETING OF REP. NATIONAL e nl ; for the Chairmanship. nolds tonight. Prel 208 2, for the chairmanshi t by the resignation of R. Willcox. - Geor ifl which he said that “all we lected as chairman of committee. who, by his being able to harm for a political p: similation, not by elimination.” onize and organize; registered with Mr. n Murphy, New Jersey. Three progressives, Mr. Harold L. Ickes, Chicago, the six progressives committee of fifteen ‘were not expected, although invited. a| FIRST INSTALLMENT OF Been Delivered. . | tration week” In:every state. drawn swords as thev were going to; COMMITTEE IN ST. LOUIS Interest is Centered in the Contest St. Louis, Mo, Feb. 10—Eighteen members of the’ republican national committee, which is to hold .a series of conferences and one formal meet: ing here tomorrow and Tuesday, had reported to Secretary James B. Rey- centered inth test bfi'mmfi i n the con ol T. Adams of Jowa and W. H. Hays of ip _made William rge W. Perkins of New York ar- rived tonight and issued a statement sives ask is that a republican be se- the natjonal record and ability, will at once give promise of arty succeeds by as- Among other committeemen who Reynolds was 4 Ber: and Ever- ett Colby, New Jersey, were presont by invitation. |They were included in on the advisory of ‘the Hughes campaign. The other three, Chester Rowell, California; James R. Garfleld, Ohio, ‘and Oscar S, Straus, New York, Shanghai, China, Feb, 10.—The first Installment of arms for China under ONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1918 8 PAGES—64 COLUMNS PRICE TWO CENTS ' — A QUARTER OF A" MILLION. OF SKILLED WORKMEN NEEDED | ENUE COMMISSIONER ROPER — AS VOLUNTEER RESERVE|DATE ' Ni ' The Purpase ! Skilled Workers Who Can Be Called on for Service in the Shipyards as They ‘Are Needsd. ‘Washington, Feb. .—An attempt| Washington, Feb, 10—Extension of 1o enlist at least @ quarter of a mil'son | the time for filing {ncome and excess skilled- workmen in. its ship -yard vol- | profits from March 1 to Apeil 1, was unteer reserve will be made thig week|announced today by Internal Revenue by the ncy . Fleet C | Commissioner Roper. This ruling through state councils of defense. The [applies 'also to reports on_pa ts week has as_“regls-|of more than $800 durjng the year to The in setablishing the te- |ontersrisen, and eogers. incomes. borh The purpoge in ¢ e fe- |enterprises, and covers incomes bot Serve is to create a body «f skillsd|above and below $3,000 and corpor- workers - who can be-called -on for|ation incomes. .- service in the ship yards as they are| Delay in the preparation of blank needed. ’ 1 forms and regulations was the prin- Chairman Hurley Explains. cipal cause for, the postponement.. “The. organization,” said <Chairman| The extensior of time to April 1 ap- Hurley, of the shipping board -toright, | plies/ to returns by corporations doing “is to composed. of workmen who |business on a fiscal year basis. Orig- are to give a.good day's Ty e | e B, B e s for a good day's pay, workmen Who in sixty 5 after the éne are ot asked to saccifice present o et ‘el s extended to Fob: sitions to. 1nsh madly off to the ship |ruary 1 and jater to March 1. yards: which. may. not be: able to ae- commodate them - for the moment, but who stand ready when called up- on, to do a particular job for a par- ticuldr wege in a particular place, and who enpoll themselves so that en needed they may be readily reached. Housing ls Being Arranged. “The need of the nation is great. The shipping board has thy money, the housing of men is being arranged for, the yards are being completéd and the material| provided. - All that how is.lacking i8 the spirit in the nation’ that will send the best and most effi- cient mechanics into the yards, but not in a fashion to disrupt the buginess of the country throngh the robbing of present industries. It is planned to make a careful selection of men whose places can be filled without hardship and who when called upon to give up the jog they now hold will have wait- ing for them definite positions at defi- nite wages in definite yards.” ARMY TRUCKS CARRYING ENROLLMENT SUPPLIES Needed in Campaign for. Recruiting s Delay in-the Preparation of Blank ‘ Forms and Regulations - Was the Principal ‘Cause of the Postpone- ,ment of the Time.Set, March 1. FORECAST 6F BUSINESS IN CONGRESS THIS WEEK Railroad and War [Legislation Will Be Considered. Washington, Feb. 10.—Railroad and war organization = legislation will largely divide Jnterest and effort -of congress this week. As amended by committees, teh la- bor bills to rule government oper- ation of railroads duging the war will th senate and a posal . is planned by - leaders, -though there will be interruptions, for action lon matters which can be disposed ~f withotit delay and further discassion of war efficiency 2nd measures propos- ing_reorganization of machinery. In the senate, although the railroad bill is to have right of way, under the rules freedom of debate the war dis- cussion probably will be the subject ‘actually before the senators -almost daily this week. - Several are prepar- ing addresses on the military com- miltee's bill for a war cablust and . 10.—Army trucks|munitions director. 2 wore Gallod 1hto Servise Today. toPrumg | Th mew element in the controvér- to . this y , from W"t{%f"“‘ 20,000 | SV over war qflmqfi-fflu bill sent enroliment bianks and_other suppiibs |10 tiie senate by ing government ‘departments and offi- clal#-—-will be taken up -tomorrow. by the senate judiciary committee. Ref- erence to a_sub-committee, probably headed by Semator Overman, who in- troduced the .meastre, is expected to follor. Secretary Baker probably will zo to the capitol dung the week to dis- cuss, confidentally before the military committec the outlook for army trans- port tonnage on which he bases ids hopes of sending a million and_a half troops to Europe this year. (Canton- ment and national guard camp ques- tions ‘will come up tomorrow with Brigadier General Littel = before . the committee. 2 It is esfimalsd there are 20,000 idle men in the building trades,here who are adaptable to steel ship construc- tion. Tt is said there may be 200,000 men_ in the country who are similarly available. The ‘emergency: fleet corporation soon will open schools at the 126shipyards where government . ships . are . being built. In these schools those who en- ter thé service will be taught to adapt their skill to the work of building vessels. Hiinois Can Spare 100,000 Men. Chicago. Feb. 10.—On the eve of the opening of the nation-wide drive .for 250,000 shipydrd workers, Illinois offi- cials tonight declared the state can epare at least 100,000 skilled mechan= ics, although its quota is orly 23,666 men. CARDINAL _ L?@yE‘MREFERS TO THE TRISH-.CONVENTION S vy In His Lentsn Letter—Onlls For Pray- ers For Satisfactory Settlement. 1 COL. ROOSEVELT CONTINUES P TO STEADILY IMPROVE The Essential Thing Now is Absolute Qui and Rest, New_York, Feb. 10.—Colonel Theo- dore Roosevelt, who underwent two operations at the Roosevelt' Hospital last week, is steadily improving and his physicians believe tonight that his recovery is simply 4 matter of time. The following bulletin -was issued at{ the hospital shortly before noon: “Colonel Roosevelt continues to im- prove. His temperature and pulse are normal. ~ The alarming symptoms in his ear have subsided so that there is no indication that a- further operation will be necessary. While Colonel Roosevelt will in’ all' probability, suf- fer acutely for. several days, the at- tending surgeons. look for his com- plete - recovery. essential- thing now is absolute quiet and rest.” Dr. Arthur B. Duel, the eye and ear specialist who is in-charge of the case, spent about. twenty mindtes with the distinguished o patient. ~Later in the day he reportéd that there was no change in the \Colomel’s condition since e morning bulletin issued. Mrs. Roosevéit recsl"l:!a the follow- ing cablegram from King George of England’ tonight: - - “The queen and I regret the illness of Colonel Roosevelt and hope for his speedy recovery.” There was a stream of callers at the hospital all day inquiring as to Armagh, Treland, Feb. 10.—Cardinal Logue, the primate of Ireland, in his Lenten letter read in: the churches »f the Armagh archdiocese today, ref red to the Irish convention. “It's failure,” he said, “would throw Ireland back into ‘the old round of alternate outbreak and 'repression, blasting every hope of progress and prosperity. The reform must, howev- er, be thorough-going. The -half meas- ures which have been the bane of Ireland in the past,’so far from prov-) ing @ remedy would aggravate the disease. It would be lamentable if measures were produced which tre people would reject with contempt, as they so often before have rejected worthless projects.” The cardinal exhorted the people to pray perseveringly that this effort might end in a complete and satisfac- tory settlement. ALLEGED PLOT TO POISON SOLDIERS AT CAMP DIX By Placing Ground Glass in Candy— Agents Investigating. Camp Dix, N. J., Feb. 10.—Agents of the department of justice arrived here today to begin a rigid investigation into what is believed to have been a plot to poison’ soldiers here by placing ground glass in candy. Surgeons are watching carefully all cases in the hos- pital to detect eymptoms of poisoning, but none has developed as yet. It was reported tonight the investi- gation may extend to every army camp in the country. U. 8. ARTILLERYMAN KILLED BY SHELLFIRE Five Wounded Saturday Night—Amer- the patient's condition. COLD WEATHER INTERFERES WITH MILL SCHEDULES Water Frozen in the Shetucket, Yan- tic, Assawaga and Quinebaug Rivers. Plainfield, Com,, Feb. 10.—The ex- > , me mdd, ‘weather has m:'ng ‘havoe _ican Artillery "Active. many miil schedules in this part 4 — of the niu, the streams on which | With the American Army in France, these mills depend for power being|Fed. 10.—(By The Associated Press) either. dry or frosen to such depths|—One American artilleryman was that little ‘water comes through, As|killed and five artillery were wounded a result, thousands of-persons employ- | Saturday by shellfire. ed in’ the mills, especially those Along| The Americans sprinkled the once a month. _Knitting . have been excluded from ' the . gallery, of. the senate. | ANNOUNCED BY INTER‘NAL REV- |in decideg to close all OW APRIL 1ST|™ and. business | 950. war-making i the state, the Virginia ‘legislature has 10 tite senate it Wilson pro-| O (S g Ao ‘&'&«'m:‘j r Condensed Telegrams Senator $moot urged an eatless day The Reéd Cross will open 10 stations New York where free wool will be distributed. West Springfield, ass., auth schools for am, ir finite ‘period. Municipal cantrol” of milk is proyid- ed by the terms of a bill introduced in the New York assembly Sir ' Jossph John Thompson; profes- sor‘of ‘physies‘at Cambridge, was ap- pointed master of Trinity Collége. a appe ed on the Canadian casudlties Tist, { b Major-Generai Clarence R. Edwards, an ald’'toGeneral Pershing, is recup- erating frompneumonia in France. Sal of wat = saving certificates and rift - stamps from Dec. ‘1; to Feb. 5,'1918, amourted to $4 50. 1917, 1,912, A steamer which. sent our wireless calls for help on Thursday off = New Foundland has not Been heard from since. Ellis P. Passmore was elected gov- ernor of the Federal Reserve Banl Philadelphia, to succeed Charles Rboads. $A, Bill_was introduced in the New ‘ork Assembly . making the public service members elective instead - of appointive. % Ray Claflin. Bridgeman and L. N. Hall, aviators of the Lafayette eschr- drille, were transferred to the Amer- ican forces. Hubert P.'Game; an advanced cadet at the aviation school at Wichita Falls, Tex.. was killed by the collapse of his machine. Every shipyard along the south At- lantic coast has been ordered to speed v ‘work on £the merchant . 0 ent. e b Three ' freight trains were derailed on the Hrie railroad at.Cochecton, N. Y.. Four employes were. injured and many cars were ‘wrecked. 5y For the first timi in the history. of arranged. to observe Lincoln's birth- day; anniverssary tomorrow. The : Serbian Mission to the United States yisited .the New Yark Stock Exchange and' watched the trading on TUSCANA e e FOUR CONNECTICUT MEN AMONG THE MISSI No . Official Report Has Reached the War Department bo Change the Estimate That All Except 113 of the Men Were Saved—The Names the Cables and There is No_Assurance as to When the - * List Will Be Complete. — ‘Washington, Feb. 10.—Sighteen hun- dred and thirty-two names of Amert- can_ soldiers rescued from the torpe- doed liner Tuscania had been report- ed tonight to the war department, Jeaving 346 of the soldjers on board unaccounted for. No official report has reached the department to change the estimate that all except 113 of the men were saved, but the names have been coming in very'slowly over the cables and there is no. assurdnce as to_when the list will be complete. “From the names ‘so ‘far received and the passenger list of ‘the lost steamer The Associated Press has compiled the record of those still ‘mot reported. Probably more than 200 of the men whose names appear /on this record are gafe in Ireland and will be reported soon, i The preparation’of the list, even in its incomplete form, represents an' ag- gregate of 144 hours of labor. The war depdrtment has only 'issued ‘an official roil ‘of those on the ship. 'The com- mittée on public information has made no effort to compile a list of the miss- ing, ‘merely issuing lists of survivots. In order to compile a liét of missing and unreported ‘it was necessary to search for each name-in both lists, a laborious process in dealing with more than 2,000 names. List of Missing Men. the board for nearly an-hour. - Effigies of the Kaiser, von Hinden- burg. and ‘the Crown Prince were giv- en an- claborates.funeral on the state houge lawa in Columbus, Qhto. i believe Genéral Brusiloff, commarder-in- chiéf of the Russian armies - under former Premiér Kerensky, was arrest- d by the.Balsheviki in Moscoy. Fuel Administrator Storrow called a conference of ithe New Hngland col- lege ‘presidents to consider the advis- ability of having the colleges close. Dr: Van Loon, back from the Neth- erlands, declared that Germany is go- ing to_send ot big ‘submarines,*which can carry 16-inch guns, during March. il ey The .international Committee. of the eva ross, unanimously de- {0 inake ‘euyappedl o the bel- R o ot 10 uwe gas”in wartare:: % g J.H. Elliott, general: manager of Texas & Pacific Railway, accepted the appointment as general manager of the railways of the ‘Amierican expedi- tionary forces. E Walter H. Shattuck, of Haverhill, a private in the National army at,Camp Ayer, sentenced to serve three months for. being. absent without I caped ‘from jail eave, ‘es- Secrotary of War Baker and Sur- geon General William C. Gorgas of the “United States army visiter Camp Meade, -Md., yesterday and spent sev- eral hours going through the base hos- pital. Felix Bell, said to be an American, has been arrested at Copenhagen, charged with being the chief conspir- ator in a plot to smuggle rubber and mark to Sweden. J. P. Morgan has ordered that.the greenhouse at Peacock Point, near Glen Cove, L. L, be closed. His many thousand’ plants ~ will be ' given to friends to care for them and some will be sent’to the South. The squad of Itafian aviators who have ‘been acting as- instructors for American fliers at Langley Field, Nor- fork. Va.. have been ordered home. They _include -three famous .- pilots, Resnati, Baldioli and Tappi. A Fort Worth, Tex, despatch says: Cadet Joseph Daniel | Bronson, aged 24, of the Royal Fleid. fell from, a height of 300 feet. His home was in New Brunswick, Canada. e WEEKLY. REVIEW BY THE WAR DEPARTMENT. No. Actions of More Than Local Char- acter Are Recorded. ‘Washington, Feb. 10.—Development of Germanpy's -long - deferred in the west from the reconnoif ing enemy | thrusts launched during the. past week: the Shetucket Yantlc, ‘Assawauga |trenches with shrapnel all during to- a day. There was considerablo patrel B the taaens Tivere aryidle mneh |y S but no, urther: clashearwere e A reported. TEN . DEATHS . REPORTED BY GENERAL PERSHING. |PULVERIZED GLASS IN b FEED FOR HORSES Two Men from Copnecticut from Lo o= Natural Causes. Caused the Death of 17 in a U. 8. In- G fal Supply Company. ‘Washington, Feb. 10.—Ten deaths e, —_‘p S from natural causes among-members of | Waco, Texas, Feb. 10.—Fixed glass the American - expeditionary forces | mixed with feed caused the death of . mated at about $200,000. The ori we: rted by General Pe toe h a United State ol | of the fire has not béen defermined. | the Japanese arms loaa was Gelivered | day, Acors e erel Pershing inantry subBly company which - ase wheat cereals and other, " products — g at Chin-Wang-Tao, Chi-Li province | Corporal James ¥. Strange, infantry, |rived here yestrday from Fort Ogle- made from wheat, rye flour, rye meal,| Denial ade . fon onday last, according to|diabetes, South Manchester; Conn, thorpe, Ga., according to. military au-| nsed meal, plaie rolling inills, open | tamily of & Loomis Ave: rear” g |dczpatches fr ipment it 1o scaten | prpo JFre0k EL GIING; (ntantry, | thorities, " The animy hadions blast ces, steel furnaces, Mionaire trolley man 3 . 3 nia, Co ~|dead -in the cars and a ex- I B comtaining | § e Tion o he Sovemmene | o e sty " e 4| Pl Trvne” &% ntuntr, | iination o Lol fecd Aisdone the bber, - " 5 ed i o ey s e oty o, n.a.n i g:n':@:flc thrombosis,” Northampton, | puly glass. . Government s are investigating, iy around Cambrai and at other points is suggested as a possibility in the week- Iy military review & tomight by the war department. So far, however, in spite of heavy fighting, the depart- ment ‘says no actions of ‘more than local character have been recorded. The review tells of the torpedsing of the- liner Tuscania, which' carried more than 2,100- American soldiers, and attributes the relatively small loss of life, estimated at about 113 men, to the' fine discipline of the soldiers and efficiency of those in_ command. 1 expresses profound appreciation of the Tescue work of the British navy, th Amerithn troohe. oocupTIaG & secr American troops 2 sec- tor ,of ithe Lorraine front, the depart- ment they handzwn themselves 11 ‘task and are rap- idly- acepstomed to trench kla. o o Captsin Phillp K2burn, Lighthal, other prohibited products from Den- Following #s- the :list of those on board ’ the who so far have not . -been reported - among the sur- vivors: Casuals. Capéain Led P.. Lebron, Guthrie, ol t N. Y. Phillp Vincent Sherman, vt [First: Lieutenant = William Binnle, Minn. Fridley, > “FirstLieutenant Clifford Wellington ‘Waller, Fenton, Mich. ::Second ~ Lieutemant <harles Scott Patterson, Los Angeles, Calif. Civil. . Employes. Edward T. Fitzgetald, Detroit, Mich. ST WBE IMCCONTEDFIR Probably More Than 200 of Them Are Safe in Ireland and Will Be Reported Soon IR Are Coming in Slowly Over i Ruben Cohen, New York. Thomas A. Liewellyn, Scottdale. Pa. Co. E, Sixth Battalion. ) Company E, Sixth, Battalion, 20th Engineers: Second Lieutenant Richard Warren, ‘Waltham, Mass. Sergeant Gilbert H. Wiggin, North Minneapolis, Minn. Privatss. John E. McDonald, Springfield, Cal John C. Johnson, Big Falls, Minn. Jack J. Byrne, Butte, Mont. Clyde G. Jenkins, Coalinga, Cal. Tommie W. Cook, Rayville, La. Leonard H. Dethman, McCabe, Mont. George R."Rogers, Dallas, Wis. John Edwards, Butte, Mont. ¢ ‘Albert 1. Nauman, Minneapolis, Minn. Jesse Robert Kime, Deer Park,Wash. Carl V. Jacobson, Elk City, Ore. = Jefterson Davis Jones, Winfield, Tex. Amos McDaniel, Stockdale, TAx. Elmer Holden, Fort Worth, Tex. Co. F, Sixth Battalion. A Company F, Sixth Battalion, 20th Engineers. (Forestry) National Ar- my: Sergeant William J. Lambert, Philt adelphia, Pa. AR Corporals. George [Lankenau, calif. * Terry Tuttle, Eigin, Ore. _Vthllam R. Johnson, Metamora,; ich. i\ Herbert C. J. Besner, Saginaw, Mich, B Ruel A, Parrott, Garrison, Texas, Ecaglen Granville J. Wade, Elwood, Neb. 2 i Zhesdore B, Newton, Forest-Grove, re. Privates, John W. Cheshier, Lucas, Wash. William ~ Matthews, . Bellingham, Washn. Eugene W. Snyder, Rimrock, Everett H. Dufty,” Silosm s.m Hallie M.’ Hoselton, Cobur, Ore. William' 1. Droogs, Mount Idaho, Abner B. Larned, Detroit, Mich, Headquarters ~Detachment, Sixth Baitalion, * 20th Bmgineers, Natiopal Army: : Privates, Raymond Butler, New Richmond, Wis. Irene Smith, Spokane, Washn.' Herschell ‘0. Baird, Wagoner, Okla. ‘Walter L. Brown, Pera Va. Chrence H. Bradshaw, Haverhill, Mass. Edwin R. Burkey, Bermidji, Minf. ‘William_E. Bennett, Rogers, Ark. . Arthur W." Collins, Appleby, Tex. Idaho. o Fred Y. Herman. Lincoln, Neb. Charleb T.. Thompson, Endeavor, Pa. George Muntray, Grandview, . George Nelson Bjork, St. Helesa, Ore. * Hans M. Erickson, Beverton, Ore. + Thomas H. Davenport, Bellinghmm,| ash. Thomas H. Davenport, Bellingham,’ Wash. : ) Guss Johnson. Reedsport, Ore. 3 Charies F. Billing. Rosenberg, Tex. Charles L. Hall, Vancouver, Wash. |~ Erven Miller, Anselmo, N(e)h. Te. Medical Detachment. ‘Medical Detachment, Sixth Battal- ion, 20th Engineers, National Arm: Sergeants. Oliver Cotte, Weedon Station, Can- Gerald K. Glover, Hopewell, Va. ; Privates. George R. V. Cary, Springfield, Mass. Clarence W. McCollim, Cascade, Mont. James 'W. Sallee, Hot Springs, Mont. Co. D, Sixth Battalion. Company “D, ‘Engineers. porals. Clea Bargerstock, Marienville, Pa. - Nathan B. Short, Stephens, Ark. : Privates. Benjamin G. Olmsted, Tennio, Wash. Elmer L. Cowan, Viotor, Mont. Nat Latham, Staford, Va. Henry C. Murphy, Wallowa, Ore Marcus B. Cook, Como, Mont. Sidney ‘'W. Bernitt, Marshfield, Ore. Fred K. Allen, Ada, Minn. ‘William P, Morrin, Portland, Ore. Lambert H. Mocker, Nashville, Tenn. George A. Stierlen, Ferndale, Wash. Robert J. Moody, Cambridge, Mimn. Robert F. Warren, Seattle, Wash, Roy r, Denver, Col. Edward F. Roderick D. MacDonald, Bellingham, w“'fi C._Anderson, Andrew C. An Nelson, Minn. Archie D. Roberts, Salem. Ore. mWiIUnm C. Constans, Blue ‘Earth, nn. John P. Phlegley, Modoc, TlI, Hans Amdam, Orskog, Norway. Elis S. Smith, Magnolia Park (no S Ein o Stephens, § Elyin 0. ens, Springfield, Ore. Norman G. Crocker, Center, Tex. Joe R. Redfield, Gléndale, Ore, Winston A. Hartsock, Rapidan, Va.| Henry G. Bates, Baker, Ore. PBlmer A. Huston, Held, Ore, Walter T. Larsen, Warren, Ore, Fish, Wheaton, Minn, . Collins, Markesan, Wis. Dale M. Atvin John A. Laako, Astoria, Ore. John_Sioss, Lochwinnoch, Renfrew- shire, Scotland. Lester L. Sqnith, Galice, Ore. Alexander J. -Dunn, Portland, Ore. ' Gunder G. Austad, Oklee, Minn, Fred M. Unger, Parkston, S, D, John A. Eichhammer, Bast Grand [t | Forks. Minn. John C. Robinson, Potlatch, Idaho, Percy A. Stephens, Bend, Ore. Wilkiam A. Dinter, Cuero, Tex. mnw‘fllun L. Trageser, Cottonwood, n. i ‘Verner C. Branland, Colton, Ore. James A. Clagd . Jennings Rice Lake, Wis. Bradley, Swaty, B. Crow, Appieby, Tex. n, , Sixth Battallon, 20th W Parker, Grant's Pass, Ore, | K: 7 Wash. Guy W. Jameson, Portland. Ore. Anton_B. Olson, Milian, Wash. {a5red 3. Groomer, Horse Shos Bend, daho, i Roy E. Powelson, Mills. City, Ore. James L: Pierce, Creswell, Ore. Julius, Wagner, Stamford, Con: Alfio Ligari, Eureka, Calif. James B. Gurney, Giide, Ore. Fred M. Lintow, Lamoine, Calif. Curtis W.” Wilson, Salem, Ore. Alpha T.. Riee, -Chariotte, Mich. Peter A. Agren, Jewell, Ore. Milton Talley, Union City, Tenn. James J. Buckley, Minneapolis, Renton, North Bendz ash. 3 Charles L. Wayne. Fort Jt Calify Alexander O McNeal, Pittsburgh,s a. Henry H. Page, ESaratoga, Texas. James R. Potillo. Huntington. Ark. Sam H. Pentecost, Dougette, Texas Luther W. Ozment, Broken Bowa: Okla. George A. Reinhardt. Jefferson, Wis. ' Lewis Roberts, Nachridocnes. Tex. . John . Ridge, Pleasant Hill, OKla. Irvin Sims,’ Alto, Texas. Thomas E. St. Clair, Junction, Tex. William W. Wright, Bismark, Okla. George V, Zimmerman, cheile, N. Y. Luther B. Reeder, Broadus, Teas. Clayton B. West, Baxter ' Spring, as. Stephen F. Mead, Reed, Charles E. Wis. Chauncey J. Davidson, Ment. Ore. i Swanson, Rothchilds, -Anaconda, | = Camp: Replacement Detachment. Replacement ~ Detachment, Travis. Privates. 3% Luarois B. Armigo, El Pdse, Texas’ George R. Baker, Carter ~Valley, Texas. Ben' Barker, Foulsburg, Texas. Edgar ‘C. Barnes, Ranger, Teas. Benjamin Birmingham, Corpus. Christi, Texas. 3 - Milton Brown, Pilot Point, Texas. Stefling %. Cofioun; St.-Jaffies. Ark: William L. Cook, Aquilla, Texas. Rupert Davis, Frisco, Texas. Albert Diaz, Mission, Texas. Sixton Flores. Alice, Texas. & Edward ‘C. Feyrer, Weiner, Texas. Benjamin' George, Tahlequah, OKla.m Martin C: Hill, Wimburley, Texas. .. Louis T. Johnson, Paris, Texas. John Kemper, Fairfax, Okla. ‘William Keown, Sand Spring, Tex-. - H as. . Merle S. Kingham, Roosevelt, Tex- as. Frank §. Kingham, Roogevelt, Tex- Frank Kosseath, San Antonio, Tex- as, Megon F. Lambert, Rotan, Texas = Ernest Linthicum, Oklohoma City, 2. . Joseph Marlin, Checotah; Okia. - Jacob W. Mertin, Fort Worth, Tex- as, : : Minguel Martines, San Diego, Texs I, ccammfa.« P-‘.: f‘“ Col. n&o&;